How do you change the volume without changing the pressure Charles law

AI Thread Summary
According to Charles's Law, volume and temperature are directly proportional when pressure is constant. Increasing temperature leads to an increase in volume, while decreasing temperature results in a decrease in volume. The discussion highlights the challenge of increasing volume without affecting pressure, as doing so typically decreases pressure. It is suggested that the most practical approach is to start by increasing temperature to subsequently increase volume. Ultimately, the consensus is that raising temperature is the feasible method to achieve an increase in volume without violating the conditions of Charles's Law.
mcfaker
Messages
43
Reaction score
0
Hi,

According to Charles gas law if you keep a certain constant pressure & moles of gas, you can relate the other 2 physical quantities (Volume & Temperature) in a formula: V/T=c




If you increase T, V will increase because the temperature is directly proportional to the volume. The same happens if you decrease T, V will decrease.

Now I can't understand how to start with V instead of T. How do you increase the Volume without changing the pressure ( because it must be constant) so that the temperature increases?


Thanks in advance!
 
Physics news on Phys.org


You have to provide some energy to increase the temperature anyway. As both V and T change at the same time, I don't think it is meaningful to separate those processes.
 


Thanks, but the problem is how do we provide that energy? If I increase the Volume of a gas, it automatically decreases pressure(!). I don't want that to happen because the pressure must be the same if we want to explain this second gaslaw.
I cannot even imagine how it would be possible to increase volume wihout the decrease of pressure so that the temperature increases.

Is that even possible? Or am I making it way too difficult & should I just always start off with increasing temperature which will increase volume and not vice versa (This way pressure doesn't change)?
 


With the usual methods to heat a gas: Put it in a hot environment, expose it to radiation, high-energetic particles, let it do chemical or nuclear reactions or find some other way to add heat.
 


Ok So 1 more last question to make sure I am getting it :p
We start with raising the temperature which will raise volume. We do not start of increasing volume to increase temperature because that is impossible, right?
 


At least not with a regular gas, right.
 


Thanks for the answers :) It helped me a lot.
 
Back
Top